Four teams ranked in the Top 25 boast dual-threat quarterbacks who average more than 200 passing yards per game, more than 40 rushing yards per game and account for at least 60 percent of their team's total offensive yardage.

Nebraska quarterback Taylor Martinez is a nifty runner and passer, but through three games, he has accounted for only 55.6 percent of the Cornhuskers’ offensive production.

Arizona's Matt Scott has even better numbers than Martinez, but his contribution of 53.3 percent of the Wildcats’ offense doesn’t make the cut—especially not when you stand it up against Denard Robinson, who accounts for a whopping 82.3 percent of Michigan’s offense.

Robinson is averaging 117 rushing yards a game and 233 passing yards. He’s far from alone in the ability to deliver a double whammy on defenses. Ohio State's Braxton Miller (72.6), West Virginia's Geno Smith (66.7) and Kansas State's Collin Klein (60) are all can’t-do-without quarterbacks.

It's convenient to dismiss these quarterbacks and their teams as "one-man bands," but that worked just fine for Baylor's Robert Griffin III (65.4 percent of team's offense in 2011), Auburn's Cam Newton (61.9 in '10) and Texas' Vince Young (61.4 in '05). Those quarterbacks combined for two Heisman Trophy awards and two national championships.

Robinson, Miller, Smith and Klein have followed the model with a combined 10-1 record this season, but the four quarterbacks are putting up video-game numbers in different fashions.

But of the four, who does what the best, and who is the best overall?

BEST PASSER

NO KIDDING: Through two games, Smith has just four incomplete passes, good for an 88 percent completion percentage.

WHAT'S NEXT: Much like West Virginia legends Major Harris and Pat White, Smith should keep the No. 8 Mountaineers in the national championship hunt. Smith, who became WVU’s all-time passing leader last week, totaled 433 yards and seven TDs in last year's Orange Bowl win against Clemson, and he is the only quarterback on a Top 25 team averaging more than 300 passing yards per game. Smith will get a chance to put West Virginia on the Big 12 map at No. 12 Texas on Oct. 6.

BEST RUNNER

NO KIDDING: Robinson accounted for 101 percent of Michigan's total offense in the win against Air Force on Sept. 8. He totaled 426 yards; the Wolverines totaled 422 yards.

WHAT'S NEXT: Robinson completes just 54.7 percent of his passes, but he more than compensates with his legs. "Shoelace" needs 901 yards to break White's record for career rushing yards by a quarterback. Despite a blowout loss to No. 1 Alabama on Sept. 1, Robinson can still lead No. 18 Michigan to its first Big Ten title since 2004. The Wolverines travel to No. 11 Notre Dame this week, but Robinson owns that game. He totaled 948 yards (582 passing, 366 rushing) and eight total TDs in the last two wins against the Irish.

MOST VALUABLE

NO KIDDING: Klein tied a single-season record for quarterbacks with 27 rushing TDs in 2011.

WHAT'S NEXT: Klein, who has a 72.9 completion percentage, leads No. 16 Kansas State into a showdown at No. 5 Oklahoma on Saturday. The Sooners outscored the Wildcats 35-0 in the second half of a 58-17 blowout last season, a game in which Klein had two rushing TDs but finished 8-of-16 passing for 58 yards. He'll need to pass the ball more effectively. A win against Oklahoma could launch a Heisman campaign that includes stops at West Virginia (Oct. 20), at No. 17 TCU (Nov. 10) and at home against Texas (Dec. 1). Robinson's numbers at Michigan are staggering, but Kansas State isn't in this spot without Klein.

BEST ALL-AROUND TALENT

WHAT'S NEXT: Ohio State coach Urban Meyer molded Bowling Green's Josh Harris, Utah's Alex Smith and Florida's Tim Tebow into superstars. Now Meyer is teamed with Miller, a combination of former Buckeye studs Troy Smith and Terrelle Pryor. Don't be surprised if Miller surpasses both. He already has TD runs of 37, 55 and 65 yards this season. No. 16 Ohio State faces UAB this week before a road trip to No. 21 Michigan State on Sept. 29. The Spartans sacked Miller four times and limited him to 84 total yards last season. Will Miller's 61.5 completion percentage hold up in Big Ten play?

BEST BET TO WIN HEISMAN TROPHY

Heisman voters haven't been kind to West Virginia in the past. Harris finished third in 1989, and White finished sixth in 2007. Smith, however, has the advantage of playing in a power conference, and the combination of gaudy statistics, wins against Texas and Oklahoma and a Big 12 championship might do the trick.

BEST BET TO WIN NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP

Ohio State is ineligible for the postseason this year, but who is going to beat Alabama or No. 2 LSU anyway? If the Buckeyes win double-digit games or go undefeated (looking at the Big Ten, it's possible), Meyer and Miller should begin 2013 ranked as high as No. 2 in the polls. Miller might just be the quarterback who gets the Big Ten's next swing against a SEC powerhouse in the national limelight.